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Architecture exhibition. 16.05. - 30.06.2009. Berlin, Germany

International Fellowships

RIBA announces seven recipients of International Fellowships  Posted: 8 October 2008









RIBA ANNOUNCES SEVEN RECIPIENTS OF INTERNATIONAL FELLOWSHIPS


The Royal Institute of British Architects' (RIBA) Council today approved seven new International Fellowships
of the RIBA. International Fellowships reward the particular contributions non-UK architects have made
to architecture. The lifetime honour, conferred annually, allows individual recipients to use the initials
Int FRIBA after their name. The RIBA International Fellowships will be presented in February 2009 at
the RIBA in London.

The RIBA’s 2009 International Fellowships are:

1. Abalos and Herreros (Spain)
Iñaki Abalos and Juan Herreros founded their practice over twenty years ago and, as a consequence of
their teaching and editorial, research and design activities, have created their own identity as architects,
demonstrating commitment to the contemporary world and concern for the urban context of new buildings.
Their pragmatic approach to architecture is typified by their interest in the skyscraper, which dates back to the exhibition they designed early in their careers (1987) on the skyscrapers of Le Corbusier. They have gone
on to build their own examples with the Barcelona apartment block, the Woermann Tower in Las Palmas
and Sociopolis, the Torre Solar in Valencia (all completed in 2005).
The work of Abelos and Herreros avoids any easy stylistic category. It is based on a playful engagement
with context. The architects take something from the place and usually bring something unexpected from
elsewhere; a material, a pattern or a way of making. They are committed to a clear tectonic articulation
of constructional form but they always bring a marvellous quality of lightness. There is a sense that
the building is only just there and might disappear or fade at any moment. The buildings are often made
of ordinary things, but they are somehow transformed by the idea.

2. Gigon and Guyer (Switzerland)
Annette Gigon and Mike Guyer have been working together for nearly two decades and have become a fixed
point of reference for younger Swiss architects. Early success came with their exemplary contribution
to Swiss museums and they have since consolidated their architectural approach with international
competition projects, housing and public buildings. Despite their apparent simplicity their buildings are
highly considered, inventive solutions, sometimes appearing to de-materialise into the surroundings,
such as their 1992 Kirchner Museum Davos, the 1995 Erweiterung Kunstmuseum in Winterthur or the
1998 Sammlung Oskar Reinhart, Römerholz also in Winterthur; sometimes concerning themselves with
materiality in the use of titanium in the family house in Graubünden (2007), with corten at the archaeological
Museum and Park Kalkriese in Osnabrück (2002) or by using iron-pigmented concrete on the signal box
in Zürich (1999). Gigon and Guyer manage to achieve striking, even theatrical effects, without appearing
to have tried. It is a fine balancing act between reserve and showiness. Their work constantly provides
us with a sense of epiphany. It shows consistent control of the materials of architecture. It appears
at once matter-of-fact and glorious.

3. Kengo Kuma (Japan)
Kengo Kuma established his practice in 1990, with the aim to utilize materials in an expressive manner and
to recover the traditions of Japanese buildings, reinterpreting them for the 21st century. He has become
well known for his use of glass, wood and stone in works as diverse as private residences, Buddhist
temples, and art museums. His buildings blur their outlines and blend into their particular landscapes,
be they in the country such as the house Great (Bamboo) Wall, and Nakagawa-machi Bato Hiroshige Museum of
Art (which also uses structural timber); or in the city such as in the sleek urban monument of the
Suntory Museum in Tokyo or the Fukusaki Hanging Garden offices in Osaka.

4. Lacaton and Vassal (France)
The Paris-based practice that Anne Lacaton and Jean-Philippe Vassal founded together aims to create
buildings which are generous in space and spirit. The duo work at ‘the edge of architecture’ on social issues
and are keen to create a better living environment through social housing that incorporates ‘freespace’ that
residents can use as they wish. The same principles apply to all their work, large and small., from their single
dwellings, such as the flexible living space of Latapie House, Floriac (1993) which incorporates a large
greenhouse-style living space with moving wall panels and flexible floor plans, to the large scale of their
Nantes School of Architecture (2008) in which a big proportion of the space is unassigned. Their real passion
is lightness. This could be the space beneath the broad sky, but really it means the skill, available to few
designers, to do just enough or even to do nothing at all. It requires extraordinary judgement and tact
to work in this way. This is architecture closely tuned to the music of what actually happens.

5. Eduardo Souto de Moura (Portugal)
Eduardo Souto de Moura produces architecture that achieves harmony and balance between the natural
and the man-made. Buildings such as the Braga Stadium, Braga, Portugal, the interiors of the Siza’s
Portuguese Pavilion at Expo 98 and his other work with Alvaro Siza such as the Serpentine Pavilion
in London in 2005 have attracted attention both within and outside of Portugal, not only because of his
capacity for reducing formal means but also his sensitive treatment of situational factors and his ability
to demonstrate a complex view of things.

6. Juhani Pallasmaa (Finland)
Juhani Pallasmaa is one of the most eminent and influential architectural thinkers in the world. His voluminous
production of articles and books have increasingly identified him as a powerful advocate of the understanding
of architecture as something appreciated by all the senses, meaning that architects need to design with more
than just visual criteria in mind. He is not only a fine writer, but a distinguished practising exponent of
architecture as well, with building credits as diverse as the Kampi Centre, a giant shopping centre and
transport interchange in Helsinki and the renovation an art museum in Lapland and of Helsinki’s Old Market Hall.

7. UN Studio (Netherlands)
Ben van Berkel & Caroline Bos are co-founders of UN Studio, an international architectural practice with
extensive experience in the fields of urbanism, infrastructure, and public, private and utility buildings.
Best known for the much-praised Mercedes Benz Museum in Stuttgart and the Erasmus Bridge in Rotterdam
which has become an emblem for the city, the practice strives to make a significant contribution to the
discipline of architecture and continually to develop the quality of its design and technology.

RIBA President Sunand Prasad said:

“The RIBA is an international organisation with more than 3,000 members outside the UK. So it is appropriate
that the institute recognises the importance of the work done by architects the world over. We therefore
welcome to the RIBA family eleven architects – from Spain, Switzerland, Japan, France, Portugal, Finland
and the Netherlands - whose work represents not only the spirit of their countries but also transcends it to
become truly international in its reference and influence.”

This year’s RIBA International Fellows jury was chaired by RIBA President Sunand Prasad and made up of
architects Sir Jeremy Dixon or Dixon Jones, Prof. Kenneth Frampton of Columbia University, Despina
Katsikakis of design consultancy DEGW, Pankaj Patel of Patel Taylor, writer Peter Davey OBE and
engineer Jane Wernick Hon FRIBA.

The RIBA International Fellows honour was created in 2006. It replaces the RIBA Honorary Fellowship for
non-UK architects whose outstanding work the RIBA wishes to mark. All existing non-UK architect Honorary
Fellows were invited to become International Fellows. Odile Decq, Kazuyo Sejima, Herman Hertzberger,
Jacques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron, Alvaro Siza, Kenzo Tange, Yoshio Taniguchi and Peter Zumthor,
amongst many others, have all been previously awarded this honour.



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